Profile Perfect Level 132 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Liam Stone avatar

Guide By Liam Stone

Published on June 3, 2026

Below is the final answer for Level 132 for you to save! After that, I'll walk you through the step-by-step process. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 132 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 132 Answer

The finished grid is below—I’ll walk through the full solve path after it, so you can see how every clue locks in.

SubjectSpeciesConservation StatusHabitatSocial BehaviorLifespanDiet
Animal ASardineLeast ConcernCoastLarge Group6 yearsPlankton
Animal BWhaleEndangeredOpen OceanSmall Group90 yearsKrill / Plankton
Animal CManateeVulnerableRiverPair40 yearsSeagrass
Animal DSharkCritically EndangeredCoralSolitary30 yearsSquid
Animal EGreat AukExtinctRocky IslandMedium Group20 yearsFish

Profile Perfect Level 132 Hints And Walkthrough

This level starts with two locked answers: Animal C’s habitat is River, and Animal E’s diet is Fish. The puzzle also has a few hidden values that aren’t shown at the beginning, including Animal B’s habitat and lifespan and Animal C’s diet. The animals are arranged in a row from Animal A to Animal E, so every “left of,” “right of,” “next to,” and “columns away” clue refers to that exact order. Let’s work through it step by step.

Step 1: Lock in Animal C’s lifespan from the River clue

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The very first clue tells us the River animal has the second-longest lifespan of 40 years. Since Animal C’s habitat is already locked as River, that means Animal C’s lifespan is 40 years. The same clue also reveals that Animal B’s lifespan is 90 years (the longest). Both of those are now placed: Animal C at 40 years, Animal B at 90 years.

Step 2: Use the “left of River’s neighbor” clue to find Animal A’s habitat

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Clue 2 says the animal on the left of River’s neighbor lives in the Coast. River is Animal C, so its neighbor could be Animal B (to the left) or Animal D (to the right). The animal on the left of that neighbor would then be either Animal A (if the neighbor is Animal B) or Animal C (if the neighbor is Animal D). But Animal C is already River, not Coast, so the neighbor has to be Animal B. That puts Animal A at Coast. Lock that in.

Step 3: Confirm Animal A’s species and conservation status

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Clue 11 says Sardine is the Least Concern animal in this list. Clue 3 adds that Animal A’s rapid breeding keeps it at Least Concern. Combined, that means Animal A is Sardine and its conservation status is Least Concern. Clue 6 also confirms this, saying the Least Concern animal is next to the Small Group animal—which we’ll place later, but it already agrees.

Step 4: Place the Whale and the Small Group clue

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Clue 13 tells us the Whale has a similar diet to the animal living in a Large Group. Animal A is already in a Large Group (we haven’t confirmed that yet, but Clue 5 shows it—more in a moment). So the Whale is Animal B, and Animal B’s social behavior is Small Group. Clue 16 adds that the Blue Whale’s diet does not include Squid or Seagrass, so Animal B’s diet will be Krill and Plankton (the slash-separated values in the final grid). We’ll lock those in later.

Step 5: Place the Shark and the Critically Endangered status

Clue 4 tells us the Great Hammerhead is classified as Critically Endangered. That’s a direct species-to-status match, so Animal D’s species is Shark and its conservation status is Critically Endangered. Clue 15 reinforces this, saying the Wild Shark avoids the Open Ocean to escape competition, which places Animal D’s habitat as Coral instead.

Step 6: Position the Solitary animal next to the Extinct animal

Clue 10 says the Solitary animal lives next to the now Extinct animal. Animal D is Solitary (from Clue 5, which we’ll confirm shortly), and Animal E is Extinct (from Clue 7). That means Animal D and Animal E are neighbors. Since Animal D is in position D and Animal E is in position E, that works perfectly—they’re already adjacent.

Step 7: Use the “Large Group not next to Solitary” clue

Clue 5 tells us the Large Group animal is not next to the Solitary one. Animal A is Large Group (we placed it in Step 3), and Animal D is Solitary. If Animal A were next to Animal D, they’d be separated by Animal B and Animal C—so they’re not adjacent. That checks out. This clue also links Animal C’s lifespan again, but we already have that.

Step 8: Place the Extinct animal farthest from Coast

Clue 7 says the Extinct pinguinus impennis used to live farthest from Coast. Coast is Animal A (position 1), so the farthest animal is Animal E at position 5. That means Animal E’s species is Great Auk and its conservation status is Extinct. The clue also confirms Animal A is Coast, which we already have.

Step 9: Position the Vulnerable animal beside Open Ocean

Clue 8 says the Vulnerable animal is beside the Open Ocean. Animal C is Vulnerable (we’ll confirm that from the hidden values), and Animal B’s habitat is Open Ocean (hidden value). Since Animal B is at position 2 and Animal C is at position 3, they’re neighbors. That works.

Step 10: Use the “Shark is 2 columns away from Small Group” clue

Clue 9 says the Shark is 2 columns away from the Small Group. Animal D is Shark (step 5) and Animal B is Small Group (step 4). Animal B is at position 2 and Animal D is at position 4—exactly two columns apart. Good.

Step 11: Place the longest- and shortest-living animals

Clue 12 says the left of the longest-living animal is the shortest-living one. Longest-living is Animal B at 90 years, so the animal to its left is Animal A. That means Animal A’s lifespan is 6 years. That fits with the Sardine’s typical lifespan and matches the grid.

Step 12: Use the Coral and Rocky Island lifespan difference

Clue 14 says the Coral animal outlives the Rocky Island animal by 10 years. Animal D is Coral (from step 5), and Animal E is Rocky Island (from step 8). Animal D’s lifespan is 30 years and Animal E’s is 20 years—that’s exactly a 10-year difference. Both are now locked.

Step 13: Place the Manatee and the Pair behavior

Clue 17 says Manatees are seen in Pairs and are strict herbivores. Animal C is the Manatee (its species), so its social behavior is Pair and its diet is Seagrass. That also matches the hidden value for Animal C’s diet.

Step 14: Determine the diet of the Coral animal

Clue 18 says the Coral animal prefers something other than Plankton and Fish. Animal D is Coral, so its diet is Squid (the only remaining option that isn’t Plankton or Fish). That locks Animal D’s diet.

Step 15: Use the Krill eater and lifespan clues

Clue 19 says the Krill eater is 3 columns away from the second-shortest lifespan. The second-shortest lifespan is 20 years (Animal E). Counting three columns away from Animal E (position 5) to the left gives position 2—Animal B. So Animal B’s diet includes Krill. Clue 20 adds that the Krill-eating animal is not 2 columns away from the herbivore. The herbivore is Animal C (Seagrass). Animal B (position 2) is one column away from Animal C (position 3), not two. That checks out.

Step 16: Finalize Animal B’s diet as Krill/Plankton

Clue 16 already established that the Blue Whale’s diet does not include Squid or Seagrass, so it must be Krill and Plankton. The grid shows both values separated by a slash, which is correct. Animal B’s diet is Krill/Plankton.

Solution: Finish the remaining matches

Now everything falls into place. Animal B’s conservation status is Endangered (the only remaining status after Least Concern, Vulnerable, Critically Endangered, and Extinct are assigned). Animal E’s social behavior is Medium Group (the only one left after Large Group, Small Group, Pair, and Solitary are placed). Animal A’s diet is Plankton (the only one left after Fish, Seagrass, Squid, and Krill/Plankton are assigned). The whole grid is complete.


Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 132

Clue 5: “The Large Group animal is not next to the Solitary one”

This one trips players up because it doesn’t directly place either animal—it only sets a restriction. If you haven’t yet confirmed which animal is Large Group and which is Solitary, this clue feels like a dead end. But once you know Animal A is Large Group and Animal D is Solitary, the clue confirms they aren’t neighbors, which helps you rule out any arrangement where they might be adjacent. In this puzzle, they’re already separated by two animals, so it’s a check rather than a new placement.

Clue 6: “Next to the Small Group is the Least Concern animal”

This clue links two traits across adjacent positions. The Least Concern animal is Animal A, and the Small Group animal is Animal B. Since Animal A and Animal B are neighbors, this clue confirms the pairing without needing to count columns. The confusion comes if you try to apply it before you know which animal is Small Group—but once you place the Whale in Step 4, the clue becomes straightforward.

Clue 7: “Extinct pinguinus impennis used to live farthest from Coast”

The term “farthest from Coast” might feel like it means distance in miles, but in this puzzle it means position in the row. Coast is Animal A at position 1, so farthest from that is Animal E at position 5. The Latin name pinguinus impennis tells you the extinct species is the Great Auk, which matches Animal E. If you misinterpret “farthest” as a spatial distance rather than a grid position, you might misplace Animal E’s habitat.

Clue 19: “Krill eater is 3 columns away from second shortest lifespan”

The second-shortest lifespan here is 20 years (Animal E). If you count three columns away from Animal E, you land on Animal B (position 2). But this kind of “columns away” counting can be confusing—are you counting the starting column or not? The answer is no: “3 columns away” means there are two animals between them (positions 3 and 4 are between positions 2 and 5). Getting that counting right is crucial.


Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 132 is a satisfying puzzle because it starts with a few clear anchors—the River habitat and the Fish diet—and builds outward through a chain of neighbor relationships and lifespan comparisons. The hidden values for Animal B’s habitat and lifespan, plus Animal C’s diet, aren’t obvious at first, but the clues gently steer you toward them. The key is to follow the positional clues carefully, especially the “left of,” “next to,” and “columns away” language. Once you lock in the Whale, the Shark, and the extinct Great Auk, the rest of the grid fills in naturally. Happy solving

Need help with another level later? Save the level walkthrough index so you can return whenever you need the answer. If you have feedback or ideas, share them in the comments. Good luck and enjoy the puzzle!

Thanks, — Liam

Liam Stone avatar

Liam Stone

Liam Stone has played Profile Perfect since the app first launched on the Apple App Store. He spotted its potential early, and that early bet turned into hundreds of hours spent solving levels, testing clue logic, and documenting answers for other players. Liam runs the YouTube channel Puzzle Game Answer where his puzzle walkthroughs have earned over 935,000 views and a growing community of more than 800 subscribers. He covers a wide range of mobile puzzle games beyond Profile Perfect, giving him firsthand experience with how these games design clues, structure levels, and trip up even experienced players. Every guide on this site reflects that hands on experience. Liam plays each level himself, verifies every answer against the in game grid, and rewrites confusing clues into plain language so you don't need to guess. If you want more of his walkthroughs, subscribe to his channel.

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